« Posts tagged Classic Jazz Podcast

Jazz without Horns

Who said that Jazz music had to consist of wind instruments to be considered “Jazz.” No Saxophone, Trumpet, Trombone, Clarinet and so on found here but great innovative stuff. Jazz is Jazz to me and that’s why I prepared this 4 set podcast here and to further prove that Jazz sounds great, no matter what instrument it’s played with, as long as it’s played right. The Piano has to be there, that’s for sure but I’m sure someone has already played Jazz without having a Pianist present, it’s possible. I particularly love the 2nd set, wow! Duke Ellington, Mingus and Max Roach, talk about improvising. Enjoy!

Note to all new readers of the Cubanology MediaBlog: All the podcasts are located in the beginning and end of the post. I suggest opening up the podcast by clicking on “Play in new window” so you can scroll through the post itself and visit the links and/or go on with your business and listen in the background. Thank you and enjoy!

 

 

1st Set:

1. “D-Natural Blues” 2. “Four on Six” and 3. “Mr. Walker” From “The Incredible Jazz Guitar of Wes Montgomery” CD Album.

More on Album:

John “Wes” Montgomery taught himself to play at the age of nineteen and created a style as influential to jazz guitar as was Charlie Christian’s to an earlier generation. Recorded in the early part of his solo career, THE INCREDIBLE JAZZ GUITAR OF WES MONTGOMERY defined standards for hard bop guitar which are as cogent today as they were in 1960.

The album jumps out with the quartet hustling through Sonny Rollins’ “Airegin,” where Wes performs his often imitated licks with grace and agility. His extended phrases, thematic development, harmonic and melodic embellishment come together in a formidable technique with a heavy swing. An impressive use of octaves and chords coupled with the rejection of a guitar pick in favor of his own thumb allowed Wes’ guitar to sing with warmth and with beauty. The lyrical rendition of “Polka Dots And Moonbeams” and his own “D-Natural Blues” are prime examples of the fullness of his lines. To this day, whenever a guitarist uses octaves he runs the risk of comparison to Wes, such was his mastery of this technique. Another aspect of his legacy is the compositions. Since their appearance on this album, “Four On Six” and “West Coast Blues” have become standard jazz repertoire. Yet to remain in awe merely of his approach is to miss the point of what he has to say……Learn More

Biography of Wes Montgomery:

Born in Indianapolis, Indiana, United States (where he also died of a heart attack in 1968), Montgomery came from a musical family, in which his brothers, Monk (string bass and electric bass) and Buddy (vibraphone, and piano), were jazz performers. Although Wes was not skilled at reading music, he could learn complex melodies and riffs by ear. Montgomery started learning guitar in his late teens, listening to and learning recordings of his idol, the guitarist Charlie Christian.

Along with the use of octaves (playing the same note on two strings one octave apart) for which he is widely known, Montgomery was also an excellent “single-line” or “single-note” player, and was very influential in the use of block chords in his solos. His playing on the jazz standard “Lover Man” is an example of his single-note, octave and block chord soloing. (”Lover Man” appears on the Fantasy album THE MONTGOMERY BROTHERS.)

Instead of using a guitar pick, Montgomery plucked the strings with the fleshy part of his thumb, using downstrokes for single notes and a combination of upstrokes and downstrokes for chords and octaves. This technique enabled him to get a mellow, expressive tone from his guitar. George Benson, in the liner notes of the Ultimate Wes Montgomery album, wrote that “Wes had a corn on his thumb, which gave his sound that point. He would get one sound for the soft parts, and then that point by using the corn. That’s why no one will ever match Wes. And his thumb was double-jointed. He could bend it all the way back to touch his wrist, which he would do to shock people.”

He generally played a Gibson L-5CES guitar. In his later years he played one of two guitars that Gibson custom made for him. In his early years, Montgomery had a tube amp, often a Fender. In his later years he played a Standel.

Montgomery toured with vibraphonist Lionel Hampton’s orchestra from July

1948 to January 1950, and can be heard on recordings from this period. Montgomery then returned to Indianapolis and did not record again until December 1957 (save for one session in 1955), when he took part in a session that included his brothers Monk and Buddy, as well as trumpeter Freddie Hubbard, who made his recording debut with Montgomery. Most of the recordings made by Montgomery and his brothers from 1957-1959 were released on the Pacific Jazz label……Learn More

2nd Set:

4. “Money Jungle” 5. “Very Special” 6. “Caravan” 7. “Switch Blade” from the Duke Ellington “Money Jungle” CD Album.

About the Album:

Although this excellent album is listed as a Duke Ellington, equal billing should be given to the participation of Charles Mingus and Max Roach. The remastered CD is outstanding, having been cleaned up from the original master tape. The CD also has the addition of six extra tracks, including four unheard Ellington originals: “Very Special,” “Rem Blues,” “Switch Blade,” and “Backward Country Boy Blues.” He is as at home in the setting of a trio as he is with a wailing big-band, and as usual, he allows the other musicians to play. The trio version of “Caravan” is exceptional, raucous and swinging…..Learn More

3rd Set:

8. “Sweet and Sue, Just You”  9. Solemn Meditation 10. I’ve got you under my skin” From the Randy Weston “Solo, Duo and Trio” CD Album.

About Album:

Recorded in New York, New York in April 27, 1954. Originally released on Riverside (2508).

Some of pianist Randy Weston’s earliest recordings are represented on this CD, which combine the contents of a 10″ release with a full LP, both of which appeared originally on Riverside. His drastically different style of playing got critics talking about the influence of Thelonious Monk. The first five tracks feature Weston with bassist Sam Gill and drummer Art Blakey; the somewhat somber interpretation of “Sweet Sue, Just You” almost makes it humorous, but the highlights of the trio session are Weston’s original works. “Pam’s Waltz” is a gently gliding yet unpredictable piece with minimal accompaniment by Gill and Blakey sticking to brushes. “Zulu” is an infectious mid-tempo bop composition that has plenty of twists and turns……Learn More

4th Set:

11. “Fugue de Blues” 12. “Takeela” From the “Introducing Kenny Burrell” 2CD Album.

From Album:

Contains tracks from the sessions that resulted in INTRODUCING KENNY BURRELL (1956) and KENNY BURRELL VOL. 2 (1957), as well as tracks recorded in a 1958 session that had limited release.

Digitally remastered using 24-bit technology by Ron McMaster.

Detroit guitarist Kenny Burrell made his recording debut as a leader on Blue Note Records in 1956 at age 24, and forever changed the state of jazz guitar. This epic two-disc collection gathers that first session and two others from the same year. Burrell displays all the full-bodied, soulful swing for which he would become legendary, and a skillful hand at both standards and his own original tunes. These early sessions show a fully formed stylist who would soon take the jazz world by storm with his smooth, clear sound and unlimited creative virtuosity.

No one session stands out above the rest, although Burrell’s debut, covering all of Disc One, has a special energy. Disc Two, however, is stimulating in its pairing of Burrell in two sessions with either Frank Foster or Hank Mobley. Kenny Burrell’s first recorded chapter is a stellar beginning…..Read More

13. “Take the A Train” From the “Cat on a hot Fiddle” CD Album.

14. “Round Midnight” 15. Ruby my Dear” From “The Essential Thelonious Monk ” CD Album.

And Again:

The Lee Morgan Project (Part Two)

Welcome back, I hope you enjoyed Part one of this “The Lee Morgan Project.” If you missed it here is the link. Please remember, this multi-part project is being done in chronological order and this podcast here will deal with the seven albums he recorded from 1960 to 1964. There are three sets in total and all the information is below. The podcast is an extension to this post itself. The purpose of the podcast is  to give you a taste of the music in these albums. All the information about the albums is located below and go in conjuntion with the podcast. Thank you for visiting the Cubanology Media Blog and enjoy!

Note to all new readers of the Cubanology MediaBlog: All the podcasts are located in the beginning and end of the post. I suggest opening up the podcast by clicking on “Play in new window” so you can scroll through the post itself and visit the links and/or go on with your business and listen in the background. Thank you and enjoy!

1st set

 

(1960) 1. “Terrible T “(Take 6) and 2. “Mogie” (Take 2) From the “Here’s Lee Morgan” 2 CD Album.

More on Album:

This CD reissue has its original six songs expanded to 11 with the inclusion of five alternate takes. The music is good solid hard bop that finds Lee Morgan (already a veteran at age 21) coming out of the Clifford Brown tradition to display his own rapidly developing style. Matched with Clifford Jordan on tenor, pianist Wynton Kelly, bassist Paul Chambers and drummer Art Blakey, Morgan‘s album could pass for a Jazz Messengers set….Visit Link

(1960) 3. “These Are Soulful Days” and 4. “Nakatini Suite” From the “Lee-Way” CD Album.

More on Album:

In the 1960′s hard-bop sweepstakes, one of Freddie Hubbard’s true rivals was Lee Morgan. The late Morgan was known for his brassy, searing style, but he could be tender and lyrical as well. Recorded in 1960 (significantly before Morgan’s success with THE SIDEWINDER), LEE-WAY is in many ways one of the most quintessential hard bop discs ever recorded. The band is incredible, practically an edition of Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers: Blakey on drums, Bobby Timmons’s earthy piano, Jackie McLean’s acidic, fluid alto saxophone, and Miles Davis’s bassist Paul Chambers. This is primo, driving hard bop, with slight overtones of the era’s soul-jazz sound…..Visit Link

(1960) 5. “Easy Living” and 6. “The Hearing” From the “Expoobident” CD Album.

More on Album:

This reissue contains only the second session of the two that were previously issued as the Le Jazz/Charly (39) release of EXPOOBIDENT. This edition lists that session as being recorded on October 14, 1960 whereas the previous release states that it was recorded on October 13.

Recorded in New York, New York on February 2, 1960 and in Chicago, Illinois on October 13, 1960. Includes liner notes by Brian Priestley.

Although not one of his better known albums, Lee Morgan’s EXPOOBIDENT is a strong outing in the still-early stages of the trumpeter’s career. The oddly titled session, originally recorded for the Vee Jay label, is an excellent showcase for Morgan’s developing style as one of the premier hard bop trumpeters. Also on the date are other heavy-duty boppers like the big-toned tenor man Clifford Jordan, bassist Art Davis, the great Art Blakey on drums, and the underrated pianist Eddie Higgins. The young Morgan is the central figure, however, and smartly displays his wares in swinging fashion.

Morgan sports a tighter focus to his approach on this date, reigning in his usual over-the-top blowing reserved for Blakey’s Jazz Messenger sessions. His soloing is melodic, crisp, and neatly controlled for the most part. This makes for some shining passages that clearly illustrate the trumpeter’s major contribution………Read More

2nd Set:

(1962) 7. “Raggedy Ann” 8. “A Waltz for Fran” From the “Take Twelve” CD Album.

More on Album:

Get this recording just for Louis Hayes’ cooking hi-hat work on the opening cut “Raggedy Ann.” Following the head, Morgan prowls around the confines of the groove, poking this way and that, then finally releasing into a straight-ahead swing feel after four taut choruses. “Lee-Sure Time” has a similar brooding quality, with stark trumpet and tenor harmonies that evoke the Jazz Messengers–no surprise, considering this is the first album Morgan made after a stint with Blakey that ran from 1958 to 1961.

Saxophonist Clifford Jordan contributes “Little Spain,” a jazz waltz with a sunny disposition that gets propulsive treatment, particularly during pianist Barry Harris’ solo. Morgan’s 3/4-time contribution, “A Waltz For Fran,” is decidedly moodier, with brushwork from Hayes coloring the trumpeter’s melancholy throughout. With Elmo Hope’s serpentine title track and the closer, Morgan’s “Second’s Best” both swinging hard in minor keys, TAKE TWELVE qualifies as vintage early-’60s hard bop…..Read More

(1963) 9. “The Sidewinder” and 10. “Hocus Pocus” From “The Sidewinder” CD Album.

More on Album:

Carried by its almost impossibly infectious eponymous opening track, The Sidewinder helped foreshadow the sounds of boogaloo and soul-jazz with its healthy R&B influence and Latin tinge. While the rest of the album retreats to a more conventional hard bop sound, Morgan’s compositions are forward-thinking and universally solid. Only 25 at the time of its release, Morgan was accomplished (and perhaps cocky) enough to speak of mentoring the great Joe Henderson, who at 26 was just beginning to play dates with Blue Note after getting out of the military. Henderson makes a major contribution to the album, especially on “Totem Pole,” where his solos showed off his singular style, threatening to upstage Morgan, who is also fairly impressive here. Barry Harris, Bob Cranshaw, and Billy Higgins are all in good form throughout the album as well, and the group works together seamlessly to create an album that crackles with energy while maintaining a stylish flow…….Link

This album could be the separation and the beginning of a new era for Jazz. Because it was recorded in 1963, I don’t know of any other Jazz Band that was playing anything like this. Sidewinder opened up a new avenue for Jazz musician to take but it it doesn’t divert from the pass. It simply added another element to Hard Bop. It is clearly there and is not overshadowed. Joe Henderson and Billy Higgins should receive as much credit as Lee Morgan, who composed the whole record. The unselfish ingenuity and complete cooperation between them all to work together as one, made it possible for their success in creating a classic album.

(1964) 11. “Melancholee” and “Morgan the Pirate” From the “The Search for a New Land” CD Album.

More on the Album:

This is not one of Lee Morgan’s best known records but it is one of hisbest. Such was the commercial success of ‘The Sidewinder’ that Blue Notewanted more of the same, and this set, the next chronologically, wasshelved for nearly two years, while a ‘Sidewinder sequel’ entitled ‘TheRumproller’ was hurried through to capitilise on the former’s success withanother danceable funky opener to grab commercial notoriety.Unfortunately, although ‘The Rumproller’ is quite good, it was toocontrived to ever be in the same league as its predecessor, In some ways,Morgan was always plagued by ‘The Sidewinders’ success and the desire torepeat it in years to come.
‘Search For The New land’ on the other handwas a departure for Morgan, and all the more refreshing for it. The albumsees him expanding his repetoire in terms of both writing and soloingbeyond the big brash catchy hard bop soloing he was known for on his bestwork with Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers and ‘The Sidewinder’ What it lacksin immediacy and excitement, is made up for in more creative and variedmaterial and great musicianship.
Morgan clearly benefitted also herefrom a great line up supporting him. The sound is immediately differentfrom previous recordings, most obviously because of the inclusion of aguitarist in Grant Green, who excels throughout; while the combination ofthe more eclectic Wayne Shorter and Herbie Hancock avoids any hint of hardbop cliche or predictibilty……Learn More

(1964) 13. “Tom Cat” and 14. “Twilight Mist” From the “Tom Cat” CD Album.

More on Album:

Tom Cat continues Music Matter’s program of re-releasing generally unavailable Blue Note sessions from the 1950s and 1960s on 45-rpm vinyl double albums. As Michael Cuscuna explains in the liner notes from the original 1980 release, Tom Cat was the victim of trumpeter Lee Morgan’s unexpected crossover hit with The Sidewinder (Blue Note, 1964), which made the pop 100 charts. In the wake of this success, Tom Cat, recorded in August 1964, was shelved in favor of returning to the studio in hopes of replicating The Sidewinder‘s popular soul- and blues-tinged formula. As so often happened at Blue Note, Tom Cat didn’t see the light of day until nearly two decades later.

The Penguin Guide to Jazz on CD labels Tom Cat and many other post-The Sidewinder efforts by Morgan as little more than knockoffs—formulaic productions meant only to score another pop smash. The fact that this album was recorded before The Sidewinder‘s unforeseen success is enough to make that critique something less than credible. But if doubt remains, jazz lovers need only listen to the music. For not only can it be argued that Tom Cat beats its more famous older sibling at its own groove-steady game (“Twice Around,” the album’s third track, is a hard bop blower as powerful as anything Morgan ever put on record), but it’s also more varied, most notably in the inclusion of pianist McCoy Tyner‘s ballad “Twilight Mist.” For all its glory, The Sidewinder has but one, hard-blowing mode.

Tom Cat kicks off with the title track, a masculine musical prowl laid out in deep register by Tyner. Its insistent stair-step pattern could serve as the underpinnings of a collegiate fight song, which it nearly becomes when Tyner is joined by a chorus of horns. Morgan then takes the lead, blowing a typically lively trumpet that takes the cat out of his cadence and into more playful abandon, while never losing the forceful, testosterone drive. And with each new soloist, the creature relocates his strut, then takes it into some new, open playground…..Read More

Here’s the Podcast:

Back to Part One:Click on Image to the Lee Morgan Project “Part One or go here

Part Three:

Click on Image

Part Four-Final:

Click on Image


SECOND Radio-Style Podcast: Mingus, 60′s Hard Bop, Classic Monk, Bluesy Buddy De Franco and Soft Johnny Hodges with Duke Ellington

This was my 2nd Radio-Style podcast and featured Mingus to start, like I did on my last but for a reason. I wanted to set up my next three songs from Freddie Hubbard and Wayne Shorter. I think it was a good connection, as we traveled right into the mid 60′s  and where Hard Bop was beginning to become a little more complex. Next, I toned the music down and featured Thelonious Monk and his brilliant piano playing with “Round Midnight.” Right after that I brought the tone back up with two similar bluesy songs, one from Monk and the other from Buddy De Franco’s Quartet. Finally i finished the podcast with two soft Duke ellington songs featuring extremely soft alto saxophone playing by the great Johnny Hodges and of course, with Duke Ellington. Let me know if you liked it please:

1. “II B.S.” 2. “Theme for Lester Young” from the Mingus, Mingus, Mingus, Mingus, Mingus CD Album

3. “A Shade of Jade” from Mode to Joe CD Album

4. “Father and Son” 5. “Assunta” from the Here to Stay CD Album

6. “Witch Hunt” Wayne Shorter- Classic blue Note Recordings Double CD Album

7. “Round Midnight” 8. “Blue Monk” from the Thelonious Monk Essentials CD Album

9. “Blue Bounce” from the Gone with the Wind CD Album

10. “Wabash Blues” from the Back to Back CD Album

11. “Just a Memory” from the Side by Side CD Album